Maybe it’s to do with the individual hand – it’s something I find convincing when it comes from independents, like Meadham Kirchhoff’s exceptional and much-missed menswear presentations, or the new work of Grace Wales Bonner.

From independents, it has the sense of an individual confronting, challenging and indulging his own gender beliefs.

From a billion dollar conglomerate, it feels more like a styling imposition.

It also seems separate from the way people are wearing clothes today, which is moving towards gender neutrality.

I was in Mexico City the other week, and I overheard an American woman say how, since she’d moved there, she’d stopped wearing heels.

It was 26 degrees there during the day, but cold at night. Most men and women were wearing the same – some sort of jacket, then a vivid coloured top and jeans, with sneakers.